Israeli forces struck the IRGC Aerospace Force headquarters in Tehran — the central command directing all missile and drone fire at Israel and The Gulf — and the IRGC drone headquarters, a separate command structure for UAV operations. These are the highest-value command targets Israel has hit since the war began, targeting the organisational core of Iran's offensive campaign on Day 10.
The question is whether the targets still functioned as chokepoints. The IRGC restructured into 31 autonomous provincial commands after the first week's losses, each authorised to launch without central approval . That decentralisation was itself a response to CENTCOM strikes that reduced Iranian Ballistic missile fire by 90% and drone launches by 83% from Day 1 levels . Admiral Brad Cooper cited destroyed launch infrastructure; Iranian doctrine adapted by scattering what remained beyond centralised targeting. By Day 10, the headquarters may have been coordination and planning nodes rather than operational bottlenecks — their destruction degrades long-range campaign planning but does not necessarily halt provincial operations already authorised to act independently.
Iran's behaviour in the hours after the strikes provides partial evidence. The one-tonne warhead doctrine announcement and the first launches under Mojtaba Khamenei's authority both came after the headquarters were hit. Either the escalation was already in the operational pipeline — meaning the strikes missed the decision cycle entirely — or Iran retains sufficient redundant command capacity to absorb the loss and escalate on the same day. Both readings point to the same conclusion: the decentralisation completed before Day 10 has diluted the value of command-node strikes. No independent damage assessment is available for either target, and whether key personnel were present when the strikes landed has not been confirmed.
